
Also vanquish your foes or something, I think.
When I approach a videogame, all I’m looking for is one thing: the ability to construct a small hamlet. This is why I still, in stray moments, catch myself reflecting with a wistful sigh on my time rebuilding Monteriggioni in Assassin’s Creed 2 or that one village you build in Breath of the Wild. This is it; this is what it’s all about, man.
So my eyes quite naturally bulged out of my head when I saw what looks alarmingly like someone rebuilding a village in the trailer for upcoming tactical RPG Never’s End, coming from a gaggle of devs whose previous work includes stuff like Destiny, Triangle Strategy, Octopath Traveller, Enter the Gungeon, and Gang Beasts.
If you’re one of the apparently innumerable people who never got over Final Fantasy Tactics (fair play, really), you might want to keep an eye on this one. You’re taking turns, you’re moving on a grid, you’re customising the make-up of your party, and then you’re pitting little chibi people against skeletons and ghouls in a winner-takes-all battle to the death.
The gimmick here looks to be that your little guys can mix and match the forces of nature to do unpleasant things to their foes. As a “reincarnated, immortal warrior forged from living metal, able to harness the elements and bend them to your will” you can do things like shuffle heat about the map to create gusts of wind and knock enemies about, drain heat to freeze them, create water currents, and reshape terrain using your command of stone. Which I guess falls under the rubric of ‘Earth,’ so fine, I’ll let you have this one, Never’s End.
I’m into it. The possibilities that come from permanently altering the make-up of a map by mucking about with the elements put me in mind of Larian games at their wackiest and most chaotic.
Plus, there’s that hamlet building. “Upgrade towns, temples, and other locations to build businesses, establish trade routes, and recruit new companions to your cause,” reads the blurb, and I’m afraid that lights up all the lizard regions of my brain like a solar flare. I simply love doing logistics, and even better if by doing logistics I can progressively make a village look cooler. This is why I was put on this Earth, and it’s why I’ll be checking out Never’s End on Steam when it hits in the… near future?
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